If you want to keep using Blaze with Angular you should use the angular-with-blaze package instead of the angular package, don't remove blaze-html-templates and keep reading this file about .ng.js and ng.html

ng-annotate and .ng.js

If you want to avoid minification problems with Angular's dependency annotations, you normally need to use a syntax that you're probably already familiar with:

There is a very popular Angular tool called ng-annotate that automatically adds and removes AngularJS dependency injection annotations. Angular-meteor uses that process automatically. All you need to do is to change your .js files to end with .ng.js. Those files will be recognised by Angular-meteor and automatically corrected, so you can simply write your dependency injection like this:

AngularJS templates: .ng.html

Both Blaze (Meteor's templating system) and AngularJS use the same braces or 'double curley brackets' syntax for expressions. That causes issues when you're working with AngularJS in Meteor: Blaze will compile and override your AngularJS expression. To disable that behaviour, you can use the .ng.html file extension.